With something drifting and something shifting, the earth still held the sky.

Monday, November 10, 2014

First Impressions – The fault in our stars by John Green

It’s not the most original premise – two teenage cancer
patients fall in love. Their love is doomed because they will suffer for a long
time and long suffering is a ‘side-effect’ of dying. (This phrase ‘side-effect of
dying' is often used by the central character.) These two
teenagers have smart mouths and do their part in breaking through the myth of
suffering cancer-patients who march their way to heaven through martyrdom. One
of them dies – the one you don’t expect to (the boy). The other one copes. (The
girl.) There’s also a writer of a book ‘The Imperial Affliction’ who plays a
part in the way any writer plays a part in our lives when he has written a story that resonates with us.

Overall, the book is good. I found a few portions a little
forced and stilted but there are also passages that are beautifully written.
Especially when the two lovers quote poetry or share stories with each other.
This book was gifted and recommended by Ma, so it will always be special. But
this does not take away from the merits of the book itself. It finishes on a
note that a person will die, a love will end and so what. (But this nihilistic
nature that blazes through us, however briefly, when we suffer before we start
hitching our pain to some greater, grander plan is better captured in Lionel
Shriver’s ‘So much for that’.)